Scientific Reports (Dec 2024)

Communicative health literacy and associated variables in nine European countries: results from the HLS19 survey

  • Salvatore Metanmo,
  • Hanne Søberg Finbråten,
  • Henrik Bøggild,
  • Peter Nowak,
  • Robert Griebler,
  • Øystein Guttersrud,
  • Éva Bíró,
  • Unim Brigid,
  • Rana Charafeddine,
  • Lennert Griese,
  • Zdenek Kucera,
  • Christopher Le,
  • Doris Schaeffer,
  • Mitja Vrdelja,
  • Julien Mancini,
  • The HLS19 Consortium

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-79327-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Our study aimed to report on variables associated with communicative health literacy (COM-HL) in European adults. The HLS19 survey was conducted in 2019–2021 including nine countries which measured COM-HL by using a validated questionnaire (HLS19-COM-P-Q6 with a score ranging from 0 to 100). Linear regression models were used to study variables associated with COM-HL globally (multilevel model with random intercepts and slopes and at country level) and in each country. Additional models studied each of the HLS19-COM-P-Q6 items separately. The mean COM-HL score ranged between 62.5 and 76.6 across countries. Among the 18,137 pooled participants, COM-HL was positively associated with age, a higher self-perceived social status, previous training in healthcare, an increasing number of general practitioner visits; and negatively associated with female sex, reported financial difficulties, having a chronic condition and an increasing number of specialist visits. These effects were heterogeneous from one country to another, and from one item to another when analysing the different COM-HL items separately. However, there was a consistent statistically significant association between COM-HL (score and each item) and financial difficulties as well as self-perceived social status in all countries. Interventions to improve communication between patients and physicians should be a high priority to limit communication disparities.

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